2 CHEMAWA AMERICAN. XL 1 . . - - - , H. L. Lovelace, Manager, Published Weekly by the Pupils of the Chemawa Indian School. Subscription Price, 25 Cents Per Year, Cluhs of five and over 20 Cents pr year Entered at the Postoffice at Chemawa, Or., as second-class mail-matter. Address all Business Communications to The Chemawa American, Chemawa, Oregon. Editorial, Thanksgiving Day will be appropriately observed at this school. A grand sociable will be given Thanksgiving Eve. Reli gious services will be held on Thanks giving morning. An elegant turkey din ner which cannot be surpassed anywhere will interest and delight the pupils during the noon hour. In the evening a rare musi cal treat will be given the pupils by the Chemawa Cadet Band, in a special concert. While the people of this great country are giving thanks next Thursday, to their Creator for the blessings bestowed upon them, surely the Indian youths of our land have very great reasons to be especially thankful for the favors extended to them by the kind and liberal government. They should show their true gratitude and thankfulness for the very excellent schools provided for them without c?st, where all the comforts of a good home and the facili. ties for acquiring a first class trade and education are given to thpm, How thank ful they should be for all this when there are thousands of poor white children in this couutry and others who have no home or even a chance to go to school and get an education. The Indian boy or girl who is truly thankful to the United States for a home and school will show it by being good, obedient and diligent in, their work and studies, so that time and money will not be wasted on them. They will also grow up to be good, industrious citizens of our country, What is an education worth? It depends what kind of an education we have ob tained. There are some people who posesses an education that is worth more than an Alaskan mine or a block of real es tate in Seattle. There are others whose education is not worth a dollar to them, just because they never thoroughly understand any particular trade or trade of learning. They merely monk 3yed along, when at school carelessly neglected to study their lessons and learn a trade, more bent on having a good time than to get an educa tion. When that class of students leave school they are unable to do the work re quired of good mechanics, or educated peo ple, hence their going to school was mere ly a waste of time and money. Our education and trade is worth Ave to ten thousand dollars to any one if they will use it to the best possibility and advantage. Indian boys or girls who can go out and earn $2 to$3 per day as carpenters, harness' makers, tailors, seamstesseh, tailoresses, cooks etc etc, possesses capital stock to the value often thousand dollars. They may not think it. However it is a fact. Ten thousand dollars at interest at six percent, will only yield an income of $000 per year or $50 per month. If a young man or wo man can clear $600 per year at his or lier trade, then that trade should be as ten thou sand dollars capital stock to them. Are not boys foolish who waste their golden moments when at school? If in five years you can learn a trade and ac quire an education worth $10,000. How much do you earn each of these five years of hard faithful application and study? Your answer is $2,000 per year. How much is that per day? Get a piece of paper and figure it out. Then think about it, and be more determined than ever to improve ev ery hour and day while at school, because it pays.